Chris Dudley Was Brett Kavanaugh’s College Drinking Buddy

"When he went out Friday nights, I was usually with him," Dudley says of Kavanaugh. "I never, ever saw him blacked out, never."Oregon Gubernatorial hopeful for the GOP, and former Portland Trailblazer, Chris Dudley, debates Allen Alley and John Lim at the 2010 Dorchester Conference in Seaside. (Chris Ryan/WW)

Kavanaugh's court confirmation has been upended by two allegations—made by Dr. Christine Blasey Ford and Deborah Ramirez—that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted them: Blasey Ford at a prep-school party, and Ramirez at Yale.

One key question: Did Kavanaugh drink so heavily that he could not remember what he had done?

Today, BuzzFeed News talked to Dudley, a Yale graduate, Portland Trail Blazers player and the Republican candidate for Oregon governor who in 2010 nearly upset former Gov. John Kitzhaber. Dudley now lives in California.

He told BuzzFeed that Kavanaugh didn't get blackout drunk. And Dudley says he would know—because the two spent Friday nights drinking together.

Chris Dudley — a close friend of Kavanaugh's from Yale, and a former NBA player and Republican gubernatorial nominee in Oregon — strongly disputed that characterization to BuzzFeed News. "When he went out Friday nights, I was usually with him," Dudley said of Kavanaugh. "I never, ever saw him blacked out, never… Brett would drink, but he'd also be the guy who never missed a class. There's a reason he was top of his class."

"I went out with him all the time," Dudley told the Post. "He never blacked out. Not even close. …Brett drank, and I drank. Did he get inebriated sometimes? Yes. Did I? Yes. Just like every other college kid in America."

A Yale teammate, Chad Ludington, recalls that although expectations for Dudley were low, he soon out-worked Ricky Ewing, a phenom whom Yale snatched away from Georgetown and other basketball powerhouses.

At Yale, Ludington says, Dudley, who majored in economics and political science, "was the tallest man on campus, but not a big man on campus."

Ivy League schools do not offer athletic scholarships. So to help pay tuition, Dudley sold tickets at football games, operated the manual scoreboard at baseball games and delivered pizzas by bicycle.